spacemt354
Chili's
Awesome! Glad that all got sorted outThanks everyone - with your advice, I managed to get my post approved above.
A detailed walkthrough of High Street appears at post #12 (click the link!)
Awesome! Glad that all got sorted outThanks everyone - with your advice, I managed to get my post approved above.
A detailed walkthrough of High Street appears at post #12 (click the link!)
Kensington Park Gardens:
Accessed by turning left at the crossroads halfway up High Street, Kensington Park Gardens is not officially a land but rather an off-shoot of High Street, in the style of Edison Square or Liberty Street that were once planned to be built off Main Street in Disneyland. It is the smaller of the two "side squares" (the other being Cherry Tree Lane, on the right of High Street). The square is modeled after Kensington Park Gardens, London, one of the possible locations where the Darling children lived. The street is not mentioned by name in the book, only the house number 14, and J.M. Barrie located it in a different neighbourhood (Bloomsbury) in his earlier play. However, Kensington Park Gardens is where the children who are supposed to have inspired the books lived, and Kensington Gardens is where the statue of Peter Pan (depicted above) can be found.
The middle of the square is dominated by a garden, similar in style to Mouseton Square at the front of the park, with flowering shrubs, benches and a hedge railing, except this one is dominated by a pond with a replica of the Peter Pan statue at its centre. Coins thrown into the pond are collected and donated to the Great Ormond Street Hospital (to which Barrie bequeathed the rights to Pan).
Directly behind the statue, and opposite the side street that led to the square from High Street, is this area's only attraction: a refreshed version of Peter Pan's Flight. This is entered through the facade of the house marked No. 14 on the west side of the square.
The other sides of the square are the exits from the Windsor Theatre (south side), secondary entrances to the High Street shops (east side) and Walt's table service restaurant (north side). In the northeast corner of the square, an arch (like the one in the picture) leads into a tunnel that turns into a cave before entering the neighbouring land of Pixie Hollow. Peter Pan's Flight, which concludes in Neverland, also exits to Pixie Hollow.
Attraction:
Peter Pan's Flight - a refreshed version of the classic dark ride, guests enter the Darling home at 14 Kensington Park Gardens and follow the queue through various Edwardian period-appropriate rooms before boarding a suspended pirate ship to journey to Neverland. The enhanced ride vehicles now have a wider range of motion (including full rotation to face show scenes, speeding up as they travel through the stars, a rocking motion when they're above the sea). There are also special effects like fog to mimic cloud, ocean breeze scent as guest vehicles approach Neverland, a sprinkling of water as they pass by a waterfall, etc. Upon disembarking from the ride, guests find themselves in an enchanted glade of Neverland: Pixie Hollow.
Retail:
Secondary entrances to the High Street Emporium and Lillie Belle Boutique.
Dining:
Walt's - an American table service restaurant described earlier
Coming next: Cherry Tree Lane.
I don't know how original the story will be, but my preliminary plans for the second park (not this one) will feature a drop-tower with a tie to S.E.A. - in fact, it will be a recurring motif for the entire second park. I've not yet decided whether it will be the version used at ToT in TDS.What about a attraction that is a original version of the Tower of Terror in the park with a original story?
I did not know that! Well, that certainly would've opened up a whole new land - perhaps even an entire park.Btw did you know that Disney almost bought Doctor Who in the 90s?
Because while there’s no Tomorrowland/Discoveryland in the Disney Great British Adventure it could fit well with Doctor Who even a E ticket trackless dark ride with animatronic Daleks and Cybermen.I did not know that! Well, that certainly would've opened up a whole new land - perhaps even an entire park.
I originally toyed with a futuristic land based on Treasure Planet, but its reimagining made it a questionable fit for a British-themed park, and I wasn't sure it had enough going for it to sustain an entire land, nor were there any obvious candidates among other Disney properties with which it could co-exist. The park does have a couple of mini-lands that feature just one attraction (Kensington Park Gardens, Hell Hall, Toad Hall) but the styling of those lands makes them blend in more seamlessly with the major lands they adjoin.Because while there’s no Tomorrowland/Discoveryland in the Disney Great British Adventure it could fit well with Doctor Who even a E ticket trackless dark ride with animatronic Daleks and Cybermen.
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